Search for Marine who filmed Iwo Jima flag-raising haunted by danger

Published: Thursday, June 28, 2007

ERIC TALMADGE ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITERASSOCIATED PRESS

IWO JIMA, Japan - Avoiding unexploded grenades and hacking their way through cactus under a blazing sun, an American search team has located two caves where they believe a Marine who filmed the iconic flag-raising on Iwo Jima may have been killed 62 years ago in one of World War II's most symbolic battles.

The team, which wrapped up its 10-day expedition Wednesday, was the first U.S.-led search on this remote volcanic island since 1948.

Army Maj. Sean Stinchon, who led the effort, told The Associated Press the team conducted an extensive search on the southwestern side of Hill 362A, where Sgt. William H. Genaust was believed killed by enemy gunfire on March 4, 1945.

Stinchon said the seven-member team located two previously unmapped sites, but was unable to search them because of the possibility of a collapse and because of obstacles blocking the way. He said the team will recommend a larger search party be sent in with heavy equipment to excavate.

The condition of the two caves also underscored the difficulty of the mission.

Associated Press

Team members from the Joint POW and MIA accounting command walk outside two cave openings on the southwestern wall of "Hill 362A" on Iwo Jima island Wednesday, June 27, 2007. The first U.S. team in nearly 60 years to be sent to Iwo Jima to look for the remains of fallen American soldiers have found previously unearthed caves and will recommend the excavation of the area. The team conducted the survey to find the remains of soldiers including Sgt. William H. Genaust, a marine who filmed the iconic U.S. flag-raising on top of Iwo Jima's Mount Suribachi and was killed nine days later.

One was blocked by craggy debris, and searchers had to dig through five feet of dirt to get to the opening of the second cave. Bullet holes riddled the entrances to several caves and tunnels nearby - one of which stretched the width of the hill itself.

"It's not a best-case scenario," Stinchon said.

Still, he said the mission was "very successful" and has created hope that the bodies of Genaust - and possibly others - may be found.

Iwo Jima was the site of some of the fiercest fighting of World War II, and the photograph taken by AP photographer Joe Rosenthal of the flag-raising atop Iwo Jima's Mount Suribachi on Feb. 23, 1945, came to symbolize the Pacific War and the valor of the Marines.

Genaust filmed the flag-raising - the second that day - from just feet away from Rosenthal, who won the Pulitzer Prize for his still photograph.

The U.S. officially took the island on March 26, 1945, after a 31-day battle that pitted about 100,000 U.S. troops against 21,200 Japanese. Some 6,821 Americans were killed; only 1,033 Japanese survived.

Some 280 U.S. troops, not including pilots and those lost at sea, are still missing from the campaign. Many of them died in caves or were buried by explosions.

Japan's government and military are helping with the search on Iwo Jima, which this month was officially renamed Iwo To - the island's name before the war.

Genaust was 38 when he was killed.

On March 4, 1945, Marines were securing a cave on Hill 362A - named after its height above sea-level - when they asked Genaust to borrow his movie camera to light their way. He volunteered to shine the light in the cave himself, and was killed by enemy fire.

The cave was secured after a gunfight, and its entrance sealed, possibly by an explosion.

Genaust and another Marine protected the AP photographer as they climbed 546-foot Mount Suribachi. Genaust's footage helped prove the flag-raising was not staged, as some later claimed.

In 1995, a bronze plaque was put atop Suribachi to honor Genaust, who, before Iwo Jima, was wounded on the Pacific island of Saipan. An actor portraying him appears in the Clint Eastwood movie "Flags of Our Fathers," and an annual award has been established to honor the best videotape of a Marine Corps-related news event.

The search was prompted in large part by information provided by Bob Bolus, a Scranton, Pa., businessman who became intrigued by Genaust after reading a Parade magazine story about him two years ago. Bolus put together a team of experts that was able to pinpoint where Genaust's remains were likely to be found.

"Probably the majority of the remains they are getting are the easy ones," said Hugh Tuller, a forensic anthropologist with the U.S. team. "The chances of Americans being mixed in with them are rather slim. They have been looking more at the surface and open caves."

"This is an initial investigation," he said. "We are definitely hopeful."

Japan sent its first search parties to the island in 1952 and others have followed every year since Iwo Jima was returned to Japanese control in 1968. They have recovered 8,595 sets of remains - but, to date, no Americans.